An Anisian Peripheral Foreland Basin in the Northern Yangtze Block,
Implications for the Initial Collision Between the South and North China
Blocks
Abstract
Middle to Upper Triassic marine carbonates and siliciclastic sedimentary
rocks derived from the South Qinling orogenic belt and resting
depositionally on rocks of the northern Yangtze passive continental
margin provide an estimate of the initial contact between the
continental parts of the South China Block (SCB) and North China Block
(NCB). Our results of high-resolution sequence stratigraphy analysis of
the Middle Triassic Leikoupo Formation of the Sichuan Basin in the
northern Yangtze Block indicate that these successions were deposited in
restricted-evaporative marine platform environments and experienced
obliquely tectonic compressional deformation and uplift. Detrital zircon
geochronology indicates a proportion of the detritus was from the South
Qinling orogenic belt during deposition of the Leikoupo Formation. We,
therefore, propose that the northern Yangtze Block had transformed from
a passive continental margin into a peripheral foreland basin in
response to the initial collision between the SCB and NCB by the Anisian
age, ~20 Myr earlier than previous estimates. The
shallow marine carbonates of the Leikoupo Formation and the contemporary
Luzhou-Kaijiang paleouplifts are considered to be distal foredeep
deposits and products of forebulge flexure of the peripheral foreland
basin, respectively. The westward retreat of seawater in response to the
synchronous westward growth of the paleouplifts further supports the
oblique suturing between the two blocks and intense north-south
contraction of the Songpan-Garze Terrane, which resulted in new
transpressional flexural subsidence in front of the thrust belts,
leading to deposition of the terrestrial in the Late Triassic.